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SEEN ‘Area 47’ FOBEC cluster event

SEEN ‘Area 47’ FOBEC cluster event. Sessions. Four broad themes Enterprise in context (9.30 – 10.00) Enterprising teaching and learning Enterprising classrooms (10.00 – 11.30) Enterprising teachers (11.45 – 12.30) Enterprising schools Enterprise and Ofsted (12.45 – 1.30).

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SEEN ‘Area 47’ FOBEC cluster event

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  1. SEEN ‘Area 47’FOBEC cluster event

  2. Sessions • Four broad themes • Enterprise in context (9.30 – 10.00) Enterprising teaching and learning • Enterprising classrooms (10.00 – 11.30) • Enterprising teachers (11.45 – 12.30) Enterprising schools • Enterprise and Ofsted (12.45 – 1.30)

  3. What today isn’t about • One off enterprise activities with no lasting impact • Covering your back just to keep Ofsted happy • Keeping great ideas to yourself • Being worried that you aren’t doing enough on enterprise education • Worrying about all the GCSE coursework that still needs marking

  4. Aims for today - by 1.30 I will know about • The context of and future plans for enterprise education in England • Practical ideas for delivering enterprise CPD on a whole school basis • Ways to promote student enterprise education awareness • Sources of information for enterprise in subject areas • Simple ways to start recording and monitoring enterprise • A mechanism to gain recognition for my enterprise CPD • Whole school issues my SLT should be aware of

  5. Enterprise in context • How did we get here? • National and local context • Where are we going?

  6. How did we get here? • Enterprise Education – A history lesson • enterprise education in UK has a long and chequered history including… • TVEI, local level partnerships, EBLOs, TECs etc • provision was inconsistent and not backed up by statutory entitlement except through EIU • EIU was a cross curricular element of the original National Curriculum

  7. How did we get here? • Enterprise Education – A history lesson • HM Treasury’s view (late 1990s) • rates of entrepreneurial activity in the UK remained moderate by international standards • an environment that encourages enterprise and supports people who take opportunities and risks was a crucial ingredient of productivity improvement • So they wanted to • improve support for small and new business • promote a step change in the UK’s enterprise culture

  8. How did we get here? • Enterprise Education – A history lesson • Key Publications • A review of enterprise and the economy in education (Davis Review – Feb 2002) • Work – related learning for all at key stage 4 (QCA 2003) • Creating an enterprise culture (HM Treasury - Jan 2004) • Learning to be enterprising (Ofsted – Aug 2004) • Developing enterprising young people (Ofsted – November 2005)

  9. How did we get here? • Enterprise Education – A history lesson • Davies Review • findings shaped the current focus of WRL and enterprise education • was concerned with the employability of young people • identified and defined 3 key components of employability (enterprise capability, financial capability, economic and business understanding) • asked Ofsted to pose a new question to schools – ‘How well does the school prepare young people for employability and work (including their enterprise capability)?’

  10. How did we get here? • Enterprise Education – A history lesson • Enterprise Education supports the development of the knowledge and understanding, skills and attributes that young people require to thrive in their future working lives. • Enterprise Education involves the development of Davis’ employability components • Enterprise capability — the ability to handle uncertainty and respond positively to change, to create and implement new ideas and ways of doing things, to make reasonable risk/reward assessments and act upon them in one's personal and working life

  11. How did we get here? • Enterprise Education – A history lesson • Enterprise education involves Enterprise capability supported by: • Financial capability — the ability to manage one's own finances and to become questioning and informed consumers of financial services • Business and economic understanding — the ability to understand the business context and make informed choices between alternative uses of scarce resources • Effective enterprise learning takes place in an environment — a school, community or business setting — where young people are given autonomy to tackle relevant problems or issues that involve an element of risk and uncertainty about final outcomes, as well as reward for their successful resolution

  12. How did we get here? • Enterprise Education – A history lesson • Moving the agenda forward – phase 1 of Davies review implementation (2002-2005) • Enterprise advisors • Resources and enterprise pathfinders (700 schools) • National DfES Enterprise Education conferences • Business and Enterprise specialist status • Enterprise in all schools?

  13. Where are we now? • Phase 2 of implementation – National context • Standards fund for enterprise education (£60m per year) in all secondary schools worth between £15 – 17k per school • S’EEN – 51 Hub and spoke networks across England to offer high quality CPD in enterprise education to all secondary schools • S’EEN initially just Business and Enterprise Colleges • Network now being expanded to include a national enterprise lead school for the other specialisms

  14. Where are we now? • Phase 2 of implementation – Local context • Area 47 – Single action plan • Builds on existing good practice and networks • Fair Oak is the Hub school as well as having a local cluster • We support the development of Enterprising schools – not just schools that ‘do’ enterprise

  15. Where are we now? • Phase 2 of implementation – Local context • Autumn term 2006: • Leaders workshop • Practitioners workshop • Network schools meeting • Consultancy work starts in schools • Planning for ‘cluster workshops’ • First round of evaluation work undertaken

  16. Where are we now? • Phase 2 of implementation – Local context • Spring term 2007: • Cluster workshops • Network schools meeting • Consultancy work continues in schools • Website material in place • www.staffpart.org.uk/enterprise_network.htm • National enterprise portal also launched

  17. Where are we now? • Phase 2 of implementation – Local context • Summer term 2007: • Outreach work in cluster schools • Network schools meeting • Final round of evaluation • Report on key issues for sustaining S’EEN after funding stops

  18. Where are we going? • Standards fund money continuing until 2010 • S’EEN funding for at least another academic year • Quality assured Enterprise CPD in ALL SECONDARY SCHOOLS in next academic year • Enterprise in ALL SECONDARY SCHOOLS’ development plans • Enterprise policy in ALL SECONDARY SCHOOLS • Change in emphasis about what ‘enterprise’ means to schools – this has huge implications!

  19. Special School Special School Special School Special School Spoke Special School Special School S’EEN – an inclusive network Network School Network School Enterprise Spoke School Network School Network School Network School Network School National Enterprise Specialism Hub Network School Enterprise Spoke School Network School Enterprise Hub Network School Network School

  20. Further Developments for S’EEN in 2007 • Enterprising Leadership – a business mentoring pilot in the West Midlands • 51 Young Chambers • S’EEN – Lead Practitioners / Coordinators • 51 DfES Enterprise Education Conferences – Summer 2007 • Developing new collaborative national partnerships

  21. Why are we bothering to go anywhere? • In times of change it is the learners who inherit the earth while the learned are beautifully equipped to deal with a world that no longer exists. • The illiterate of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who cannot learn, unlearn, and relearn. • Alvin Toffler • He also wrote a book called ‘Future Shock’ the central theme of which is about the impact on society of too much change in too short a period of time.

  22. How enterprising are you?

  23. Enterprising teaching and learning- Enterprise in the classroom

  24. Enterprising Classrooms • Enterprise toolkit ideas • Whole school enterprise CPD • Enterprise speed dating • Planning using the enterprise learning outcomes and process • S’EEN resource kit cd-roms • If enterprise were ……

  25. Enterprising Classrooms • Enterprise toolkit ideas • Enterprise skill recognition • What is a real success indicator for enterprise education? • An approach to student self assessment of enterprise skills through raising their awareness

  26. Enterprising Classrooms • Enterprise toolkit ideas • Enterprise in lessons • Teacher net case studies • Opportunities from KS4 qualifications • Plans for ICT at FOBEC

  27. Enterprising Classrooms • Enterprise toolkit ideas • Monitoring and recording success • BECs still divided on best method for this • NFER report due soon on assessment • Involving students in enterprise definitions • Some practical ideas that can be implemented quickly and cheaply

  28. Which ideas will work for you? • What else have you done that you would like to share?

  29. COFFEE!!!!

  30. Enterprising teaching and learning- Enterprising Teachers

  31. Enterprising Teachers • How a S’EEN TLA can secure recognition for your CPD • What is the TLA? • Why is it a good idea? • How does it work? • TLA brief introduction presentation

  32. MORE COFFEE!!!!

  33. Enterprising Schools- Enterprise issues for your SLT

  34. Enterprising schools? • Key questions • Have we got agreed definitions of key concepts for enterprise? • Are they written down? • Do we have written aims and objectives for enterprise education? • Is enterprise in the school development plan? • How is the SMT involved? • Who is nominated to lead enterprise developments and are other enterprise champions nominated to help? • How much time is granted for preparation? • Have we got a cash resource allocated specifically to enterprise? • How is enterprise communicated throughout the school?

  35. Enterprising schools? • Enterprising heads, enterprising schools • Steal some ideas from it – we have! • Challenge your SLT to demonstrate their commitment to being enterprising • For most of us this involves a serious cultural change – don’t underestimate how difficult this is but don’t be put off either, it’s what the DfES is now saying our education system needs

  36. Enterprise, Innovation and Creativity

  37. Creativity? • Robinson report • All our futures: Creativity, culture and education • Substantial but very relevant to current thinking • The Source • Linking creativity into the enterprise agenda • Both of these are very useful to persuade staff who see enterprise as nothing to do with them

  38. What next? • The Chinese curse - May you live in interesting times • The only place where success comes before work is in the dictionary • What 3 things are you going to before half term to increase the momentum for enterprise in your own school?

  39. Enjoy your lunch

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